Abstract

BackgroundLiving with undiagnosed symptomatic coeliac disease is connected with deteriorated health, and persons with coeliac disease often wait a long time for their diagnosis. A mass screening would lower the delay, but its cost-effectiveness is still unclear. Our aim was to determine the cost-effectiveness of a coeliac disease mass screening at 12 years of age, taking a life course perspective on future benefits and drawbacks.MethodsThe cost-effectiveness was derived as cost per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) using a Markov model. As a basis for our assumptions, we mainly used information from the Exploring the Iceberg of Celiacs in Sweden (ETICS) study, a school-based screening conducted in 2005/2006 and 2009/2010, where 13,279 12-year-old children participated and 240 were diagnosed with coeliac disease, and a study involving members of the Swedish Coeliac Association with 1031 adult participants.ResultsThe cost for coeliac disease screening was 40,105 Euro per gained QALY. Sensitivity analyses support screening based on high compliance to a gluten-free diet, rapid progression from symptom-free coeliac disease to coeliac disease with symptoms, long delay from celiac disease with symptoms to diagnosis, and a low QALY score for undiagnosed coeliac disease cases.ConclusionsA coeliac disease mass screening is cost-effective based on the commonly used threshold of 50,000 Euro per gained QALY. However, this is based on many assumptions, especially regarding the natural history of coeliac disease and the effects on long-term health for individuals with coeliac disease still eating gluten.

Highlights

  • Living with undiagnosed symptomatic coeliac disease is connected with deteriorated health, and persons with coeliac disease often wait a long time for their diagnosis

  • The gain in mean value of the quality-adjusted life year score for coeliac disease patients has been shown in Sweden to improve from 0.66 before diagnosis to 0.86 after diagnosis [6], which is similar to the value for the general population in Sweden, and in the United Kingdom from 0.56, which the authors compared with the value for Norström et al BMC Gastroenterol (2021) 21:159 stroke patients, to 0.84 after diagnosis [5]

  • Exploring the Iceberg of Celiacs in Sweden (ETICS) was a school-based screening for coeliac disease among 12-year-olds in Sweden that was conducted during the school years 2005/2006 and 2009/2010 [2]

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Summary

Introduction

Living with undiagnosed symptomatic coeliac disease is connected with deteriorated health, and persons with coeliac disease often wait a long time for their diagnosis. The gain in mean value of the quality-adjusted life year score for coeliac disease patients has been shown in Sweden to improve from 0.66 before diagnosis to 0.86 after diagnosis [6], which is similar to the value for the general population in Sweden, and in the United Kingdom from 0.56, which the authors compared with the value for Norström et al BMC Gastroenterol (2021) 21:159 stroke patients, to 0.84 after diagnosis [5] In both countries, most symptoms associated with coeliac disease improved for individuals after diagnosis [5, 7]

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